Mycoplasma Species in Rapid and Slow HIV Progressors

Author:

Ainsworth J G1,Hourshid S1,Easterbrook P J2,Gilroy C B1,Weber J N1,Taylor-Robinson D1

Affiliation:

1. Genitourinary Medicine Section, Division of Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, St Mary's Hospital

2. the HIV Epidemiology Unit, Imperial College School of Medicine, at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK

Abstract

We determined the relationship between the presence of Mycoplasma fermentans and Mycoplasma penetrans and the rate of progression of HIV-associated disease in a nested case-control study based on a cohort of 159 HIV-infected patients with different rates of disease progression. Study participants were divided into 3 progression groups: non-progressors who had been HIV-1 seropositive for at least 9 years and had remained asymptomatic with a CD4 cell count of >500/mm3; slow progressors who had been HIV-1 seropositive for at least 9 years and whose CD4 cell count had fallen below 500 cells, and who had developed symptomatic disease or AIDS; and rapid progressors who had developed AIDS within 5 years of HIV infection. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were collected at enrolment and examined by mycoplasma polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Three (7%) of 46 non-progressors, 3 (3%) of 86 slow progressors, and 2 (7%) of 27 rapid progressors were M. fermentans positive. The PBMCs from 91 subjects were tested for M. penetrans DNA and none was positive. The small proportion of M. fermentans-positive patients indicates that the mycoplasma cannot be important in the development of AIDS in the large majority of patients. Furthermore, no association was found between its presence and more rapid HIV disease progression.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Dermatology

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